rooshvforum.network is a fully functional forum: you can search, register, post new threads etc...
Old accounts are inaccessible: register a new one, or recover it when possible. x


Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!
#1

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Graphene, a form of Carbon, is so strong that “it would take an elephant, balanced on a pencil, to break through a sheet of graphene the thickness of Saran Wrap [cling film]”.

Quote:Quote:

Graphene condoms: super thin and tough, but is that enough to make people have safer sex?
27 January 2014, 2.37pm GMT

The proposal of an ultra-thin condom made from graphene and latex brings design of the contraceptive into the 21st century. We have yet to see a prototype, but the developers at the University of Manchester said the thinnest and strongest condom ever made would enhance sensation during sex, which they hope will encourage more condom use.

Graphene is a form of carbon that has been touted a “miracle material”, can be one-atom thick the strongest ever measured and a replacement for silicone. James Hone, an engineering professor from Columbia University, said it was so strong that “it would take an elephant, balanced on a pencil, to break through a sheet of graphene the thickness of Saran Wrap [cling film]”.

The plan at Manchester is to combine graphene with latex, currently the main material used in making condoms, to make their own. But will enhancing sensation really make people use condoms more?

Finding the right fit

Despite condoms being one of the best ways to prevent pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections (STIs) such as chlamydia and HIV, they’re still unpopular for a variety of reasons.

There has been a lot of research carried out into understanding how often condoms are being used, what problems are associated with using them and people’s attitudes towards them. An array of social and psychological factors influence how much we use condoms, such as loss of pleasure, the smell (commonly from latex) and arguments that they cause some men to lose their erection.

People tend to weigh up the perceived pros and cons of condoms and safer sex. There is a spectrum of condom use from people not using them at all, to using them inconsistently or attempting to use them and failing. And a growing body of research is telling us more about the errors and problems people have when using condoms – including fit, breakages and spillages.

Cops and rubbers

There have been many attempts to promote condom use across the globe. In Thailand for example, attempts were made throughout the 1980s to increase condom use to lower the country’s high birth rates and as part of an HIV prevention programme in the 1990s. The government worked with brothel owners to enforce condom use, there was a mass media campaign and police officers distributed condoms through something called the “cops and rubbers” initiative.

Despite some success, problems remain with condom use still low in rural areas especially. This points to a lack of awareness and availability of condoms as a reason for low usage. But even in the West where condoms are widely available and sexual education programmes raise awareness, high rates of STIs persist. So is it really always about a lack of availability?

Condoms for the unclean?

A review of 268 qualitative studies in The Lancet found seven key themes reported by young people about unsafe sex, including that they were stigmatising or indicated a lack of trust. Another was in the perception of potential sexual partners as “clean” or “unclean” – so if a partner was deemed the former it was OK not to use a condom. Other social expectations, such as the fear of appearing “easy” or not also came into play.

Given social reasons influence sexual behaviour, new technology such as the graphene condom (and another idea exploring “shape memory”) won’t necessarily improve attitudes toward using condoms. It’s clear there’s still some way to go here.

But emphasising pleasure could be a new narrative that encourages some to weigh up the pros and cons a bit differently. For the most part, attempts to encourage young people to use condoms employ scare tactics that emphasise the consequences of not using them. But some of our research has found that young men actually reject these fear narratives and want a different tone in health communications. So a condom that emphasises “enhanced pleasure” could be effective for these groups. We are also looking into the attitudes of older adults towards condom use, as they remain sexually active.

The social and cultural forces at play that influence how young people act in the bedroom means merely providing information and condoms isn’t enough to bring about changes in sexual behaviour. While scientific advances in sexual health such as graphene condoms could be very important, getting people to wear them in the first place requires a deeper understanding of the social and cultural forces at work.

http://theconversation.com/graphene-cond...-sex-22359
Reply
#2

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Any word on cost?
Reply
#3

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

I'd rather just raw dog.
Reply
#4

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Quote: (01-27-2014 09:56 PM)Basil Ransom Wrote:  

Any word on cost?

It is just in the development stage. I assume that it must be competitively priced to gain market share.
Reply
#5

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Time to invest in Graphene?
Reply
#6

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Isn't that the best conductor currently known? Add friction during sex and wetness and you have yourself a shock therapy for your dick.
Reply
#7

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Quote: (01-28-2014 12:55 AM)Irishman Wrote:  

Time to invest in Graphene?

I'm thinking about this too. IBM recently made a microprocessor from graphene and it had a frequency of 150 GHz. It's the future. I'm just thinking is it smarter to invest in graphene mining or to gamble and invest into some graphene product company.

Source
Reply
#8

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

It's cool but the existing super-thin condoms (like Crown (Okamoto) Skinless) are already enough for my needs. I can hardly imagine the sensation getting less condom-like than that. But wait and see.

"Imagine" by HCE | Hitler reacts to Battle of Montreal | An alternative use for squid that has never crossed your mind before
Reply
#9

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Quote: (01-28-2014 03:01 AM)funkyzeit Wrote:  

Quote: (01-28-2014 12:55 AM)Irishman Wrote:  

Time to invest in Graphene?

I'm thinking about this too. IBM recently made a microprocessor from graphene and it had a frequency of 150 GHz. It's the future. I'm just thinking is it smarter to invest in graphene mining or to gamble and invest into some graphene product company.

Source

Do you have a link for that ('microprocessor with 150 GHz'). My understanding was that IBM made a 150 GHz transistor. A microprocessor would have billions of them on a chip. People have made transistors with record-breaking stats (including THz transistors), but much research is still to be done on getting to microprocessor stage.

Graphene is a very neat material. But in my humble opinion, it is perhaps highly overrated. One of the biggest challenges graphene (and really any material) needs to overcome is mass production. A lot of the research done with graphene is done by:
- filling up paper with pencil graphite
- using tape and feeling layers of graphene off each other (graphite is stack of graphene)

--> not exactly a scalable solution.

To give another example, solar cells with > 40% efficiencies have been created. Problem: they're super expensive to make and require very specialized technology that's no scalable (yet?): growing solar cells atomic layer by layer

PS Sorry for hijacking thread

Not happening. - redbeard in regards to ETH flippening BTC
Reply
#10

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Just gotta wait for it to be cheaply and easily made.
Would love some graphene innertubes for my truck tires, no more worrying about nails.
Reply
#11

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Some good ideas/uses here. Anyone know anything about how it's produced currently? Is there some way the graphite could be 'split' chemically or electrically to produce graphene in a mass production scenario?

They who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety- Benjamin Franklin, as if you didn't know...
Reply
#12

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Quote: (01-28-2014 03:01 AM)funkyzeit Wrote:  

Quote: (01-28-2014 12:55 AM)Irishman Wrote:  

Time to invest in Graphene?

I'm thinking about this too. IBM recently made a microprocessor from graphene and it had a frequency of 150 GHz. It's the future. I'm just thinking is it smarter to invest in graphene mining or to gamble and invest into some graphene product company.

Source

There are many interesting companies in the field right now. I came across one that is specializing in tailoring high-end nanomaterials. You can check it out here. But I think that greatest money gonna be in the further technology developement.
Reply
#13

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Don't get your hopes up; the FDA will likely nuke it. http://www.slate.com/articles/health_and...etter.html
Reply
#14

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

So the takeaway is that I still can't blast inside with impunity.

*sigh*

Hidey-ho, RVFerinos!
Reply
#15

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Quote: (01-27-2014 10:56 PM)Checkmat Wrote:  

I'd rather just raw dog.

I rather hope you don't have herpes.
Reply
#16

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Quote: (01-09-2018 02:59 PM)BossOfBosses Wrote:  

Quote: (01-27-2014 10:56 PM)Checkmat Wrote:  

I'd rather just raw dog.

I rather hope you don't have herpes.

Not sure I'm reading this right...but are you saying that you hope Checkmat doesn't have herpes when you are raw dogging?
Reply
#17

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

This stuff is related to graphite in pencils? Wouldn't that absorb into your dick?
Reply
#18

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Quote: (01-10-2018 12:37 PM)kbell Wrote:  

This stuff is related to graphite in pencils? Wouldn't that absorb into your dick?

Gives a rather new meaning to the term `pencil-dick`[Image: tard.gif]

We will stomp to the top with the wind in our teeth.

George L. Mallory
Reply
#19

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Quote:Quote:

James Hone, an engineering professor from Columbia University, said it was so strong that “it would take an elephant, balanced on a pencil, to break through a sheet of graphene the thickness of Saran Wrap [cling film]”.

Wouldn't work for me. I fuck much harder than that.

I'm the King of Beijing!
Reply
#20

Developing Ultra-Thin Condoms From Graphene -- Go, Science!

Funny how anything that allows men better control over paternity never seems to reach the market.

“The greatest burden a child must bear is the unlived life of its parents.”

Carl Jung
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)